Tuesday, May 12, 2020
Here Are Eight US Navy Pilot Reports From Encounters With Mysterious Aircraft Off The U.S. East Coast
Warzone/The Drive: Here Are The Navy Pilot Reports From Encounters With Mysterious Aircraft Off The East Coast
The reports are the first official documentation of various recent incidents with unidentified aircraft in restricted airspace along the east coast.
Nearly one year ago, Navy fighter pilot testimony about a seemingly bizarre rash of encounters with unidentified craft flying in restricted airspace off the east coast hit the new cycle with a bang. In the months that have followed, limited additional details about those encounters have come to light. Meanwhile, The War Zone has been slowly assembling the building blocks of a case that may explain them. What we were still missing was any official Navy documentation that alludes to them. Now that has changed, and you may be surprised as to what these newly obtained documents actually say and when the incidents they described occurred—or didn't occur—for that matter.
The War Zone obtained the eight hazard reports, all of which are marked "Unclassified" and "For Official Use Only," via a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the Naval Safety Center. Seven of them involve F/A-18E/F Super Hornets and occurred at various times between 2013 and 2014 in a patch of airspace off the coast of Virginia and North Carolina known as the W-72 warning area. The eighth incidents took place in 2019 and involved an EA-18G Growler flying in a different portion of the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Maryland called the W-386 warning area.
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WNU Editor: There is a lot of unknown activity out there.
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2 comments:
In cold war days the navy would shoot first and ask questions later. Now not so much. It would be interesting to see if this unknown would be faster than an A to A missle
Maybe you could program a missile to pace a bogey. Close and the fly off to one side or the other and stay abreast until it ran out of propellant. It would look like a hostile action though.
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